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Fed rate cut bails out Trump for policies that are slowing the economy

  • Written by Rodney Ramcharan, Associate Professor of Finance and Business Economics, University of Southern California

The Federal Reserve appears to be bailing out the president.

Responding to concerns of a slowing economy – in part caused by President Donald Trump’s trade wars – the Fed cut short-term interest rates for the first time since 2008, lowering its benchmark rate 25 basis points to 2.25%.

The cut sends a message to financial markets...

Read more: Fed rate cut bails out Trump for policies that are slowing the economy

If Germany atoned for the Holocaust, the US can pay reparations for slavery

  • Written by Bernd Reiter, Professor, University of South Florida
Slavery is not so far removed. Anderson and Minerva Edwards met in the 1860s as enslaved laborers in Texas, had 16 children and lived into their 90s in a cabin a few miles from the plantations they once worked. They are photographed here in 1937.U.S. Library of Congress

The idea of paying reparations for slavery is gaining momentum in the United...

Read more: If Germany atoned for the Holocaust, the US can pay reparations for slavery

What’s the scoop on kids and dirt? Get enough to help, but not enough to hurt, a doctor advises

  • Written by Cosby Stone, Instructor in Allergy/Immunology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Vanderbilt University
Kids may need more exposure to dirt and microbes than previously thought.MNStudio/shutterstock.com

Whenever I am asked what I do for a living, the phrase “I’m an allergist” is almost immediately followed by “So, where are all of these allergies coming from?”

Maybe I’ll get sick of that question some day, but I...

Read more: What’s the scoop on kids and dirt? Get enough to help, but not enough to hurt, a doctor advises

Black bears adapt to life near humans by burning the midnight oil

  • Written by Kathy Zeller, Postdoctoral Researcher in Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Black bear near military housing at Eglin Air Force Base in the Florida Panhandle, May 17, 2010.USAF/Kathy Gault

Amid reports that human activities are pushing many wild species to the edge of extinction, it’s easy to miss the fact that some animal populations are expanding. Across North America, a number of species that were reduced by...

Read more: Black bears adapt to life near humans by burning the midnight oil

Political polarization is about feelings, not facts

  • Written by Robert B. Talisse, W. Alton Jones Professor of Philosophy, Vanderbilt University
Animosity between partisan voters has grown in recent years.Gutzemberg/Shutterstock.com

Politicians and pundits from all quarters often lament democracy’s polarized condition.

Similarly, citizens frustrated with polarized politics also demand greater flexibility from the other side.

Decrying polarization has become a way of impugning...

Read more: Political polarization is about feelings, not facts

School spankings are banned just about everywhere around the world except in US

  • Written by Lucy Sorensen, Assistant Professor in Public Administration and Policy, University at Albany, State University of New York
Corporal punishment in schools around the world is disappearing, but a handful of countries have held on to the practice.Cat Act Art/Shutterstock.com

In 1970, only three countries – Italy, Japan and Mauritius – banned corporal punishment in schools. By 2016, more than 100 countries banned the practice, which allows teachers to legally...

Read more: School spankings are banned just about everywhere around the world except in US

All public universities get private money, but some get much more than the rest

  • Written by Kevin McClure, Associate Professor of Higher Education, University of North Carolina Wilmington
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has more than $3 billion in its endowment.AP Photo/Gerry Broome

U.S. universities raised nearly US$47 billion in the academic fiscal year that ended in mid-2018. This new record haul marked a 7% increase from the prior year.

As usual, private universities generally led the way. But public universities...

Read more: All public universities get private money, but some get much more than the rest

Yes, flesh-eating bacteria are in the warm coastal waters – but it doesn't mean you'll get sick

  • Written by Brian Labus, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Rising water temperature encourage the spread of bacteria in ocean waters.Jean Faucett/Shutterstock.com

Like humans, many bacteria like to spend time at the beach. The so-called flesh-eating bacteria, Vibrio vulnificus, don’t just like the beach; they need it, and rely on seasalt for survival. And as with human beachgoers, the warmer the...

Read more: Yes, flesh-eating bacteria are in the warm coastal waters – but it doesn't mean you'll get sick

How organized labor can reverse decades of decline

  • Written by Marick Masters, Professor of Business and Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Wayne State University

Collective bargaining has long been one of organized labor’s most attractive selling points.

In its simplest form, collective bargaining involves an organized body of employees negotiating wages and other conditions of employment. In other words, unions are saying: Join us, and we’ll bargain with your boss for better pay.

Unfortunately,...

Read more: How organized labor can reverse decades of decline

More Central American migrants take shelter in churches, recalling 1980s sanctuary movement

  • Written by Mario Garcia, Professor, Department of Chicano Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara
Honduran migrant Vicky Chavez with her daughter Issabella on May 31, 2018 in the First Unitarian Church in Salt Lake City, where she sought protection from deportation in late 2017. AP Photo/Rick Bowmer

The ongoing threat of mass immigration raids is terrifying immigrant communities across the United States.

Many of those targeted in these raids are...

Read more: More Central American migrants take shelter in churches, recalling 1980s sanctuary movement

More Articles ...

  1. The rhetorical trick Trump used on the 'Squad' and how it could affect the vote
  2. Opioid epidemic may have cost states at least $130 billion in treatment and related expenses – and that's just the tip of the iceberg
  3. Curious Kids: How are cats declawed, and is it painful?
  4. Budgeting for charity: A new way for the government to encourage giving
  5. The difference between 'left' and 'liberal' – and why voters need to know
  6. How did the presidential campaign get to be so long?
  7. How ICE enforcement has changed under the Trump administration
  8. Why Facebook's new 'privacy cop' is doomed to fail
  9. Why Trump's stoking of white racial resentment is effective – but makes all working-class Americans worse off
  10. Restricting SNAP benefits could hurt millions of Americans – and local communities
  11. Curious Kids: How does the stuff in a fire extinguisher stop a fire?
  12. A Confederate statue graveyard could help bury the Old South
  13. No, Lyme disease is not an escaped military bioweapon, despite what conspiracy theorists say
  14. Lead-based paint found in half of all inspected schools
  15. From 'Pretty Little Liars' to 'The OC,' television producers need to stop encouraging teen drinking – here's how they can
  16. A World War II battle holds key lessons for modern warfare
  17. Shark Week looms, but don't panic
  18. CBD and genetic testing provide hope for 'intractable' epilepsy in children
  19. How technology could be a solution to caregiver shortage for seniors
  20. How college towns could benefit more from throngs of student volunteers
  21. The internet is rotting – let's embrace it
  22. The Mueller hearing and the death of facts
  23. Webcams in nursing home rooms may deter elder abuse – but are they ethical?
  24. What in the world is a slime eel?
  25. Investors, consumers and workers are changing capitalism for the better by demanding companies behave more responsibly
  26. US health care: An industry too big to fail
  27. The Supreme Court decision that kept suburban schools segregated
  28. Facebook algorithm changes suppressed journalism and meddled with democracy
  29. Is Boris Johnson, Britain's new prime minister, anti-immigrant, a homophobe, a bigot – or just politically expedient?
  30. Without school, a 'lost generation' of Rohingya refugee children face uncertain future
  31. Resource depletion is a serious problem, but 'footprint' estimates don't tell us much about it
  32. Why are Atlantic and Gulf coast property owners building back bigger after hurricanes?
  33. Heart transplant doctors could help more people by accepting donations from the obese
  34. 5 ways to protect yourself from cybercrime
  35. How fireflies glow – and what signals they're sending
  36. Our database of police officers who shoot citizens reveals who's most likely to shoot
  37. Micro-naps for plants: Flicking the lights on and off can save energy without hurting indoor agriculture harvests
  38. 'Avengers: Endgame' is nowhere near the worldwide box office record – here's why
  39. Why does the US sentence people to hundreds of years in prison?
  40. Asylum restrictions: The president can enforce the law, but can't change it
  41. Waiting for an undersea robot in Antarctica to call home
  42. Could a tax on stock trades pay off the nation's student debt?
  43. What's really behind baseball's home run surge?
  44. What is at stake in the Strait of Hormuz?
  45. Smokey (the) Bear is still keeping his watchful eye on America's forests after 75 years on the job
  46. What Amazon's decision to retrain a third of its employees means for the future of work
  47. Curious Kids: Why do birds sing?
  48. Why do birds sing?
  49. Yes, I'm searching for aliens – and no, I won't be going to Area 51 to look for them
  50. Brain-machine interfaces are getting better and better – and Neuralink's new brain implant pushes the pace